41 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Review of the Pip-Boy, November 17, 2008
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Fallout 3: Amazon.com Exclusive Survival Edition (Video Game)
Please note, that I am only writing this review as a warning about the included Pipboy collectible clock.
The game itself is very well done, and the included bonus features in the lunch box (mentioned in the other review) are high quality and definitely add to the experience.
The pipboy however does not. It is incredibly cheaply produced. Upon arrival the button used to set the clock was broken on mine. I managed to get it to correct time by putting batteries in it at noon. After 1 week on display it completely died on me, and even new batteries won't get it on again.
This feels like nothing more than a $5 toy, yet it adds an impressive $40 to this package.
The repair warranty inside will replace it, although you will have to pay for shipping if this is necessary.
I highly recommend this game and the collectors edition. I can not recommend paying an extra $40 however for such a cheap 'exclusive".
This applies to all 3 versions, (PS3, X360, and PC)
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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Shoddy Clock Not Worth the Price, December 2, 2008
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Fallout 3: Amazon.com Exclusive Survival Edition (Video Game)
The game is fantastic. The lunchbox and bobblehead are neat. Those points have been made very well in other reviews of them. This review focuses on the one item exclusive to the Survival Edition, the PipBoy Clock. The clock is a poor product, plain and simple, and not worth $10 extra, much less the $50 over the Collector's Edition price.
Performance is terrible. The clock doesn't work unless you use some redneck engineering on it with aluminum foil inserts placed between the positive battery point and the positive contact plate. Once you get the batteries in and actually get power to the display, setting the time can itself is cumbersome. The three buttons provided are often times unresponsive, requiring a good deal of wiggling at times to get the display to change as desired. The display, even with fresh batteries, is very dim, very hard to interpret unless the room it's in is very dark.
In terms of power consumption, it devours batteries, consuming three AA batteries every two weeks, sometimes sooner. In comparison, the old one-way pager I carry for my job, which has an alarm, storage for phone numbers and time received, and makes some rudimentary sounds if desired, uses one AAA battery every MONTH or so. This clock doesn't even have an alarm, and uses much more power for it.
Aesthetically, the clock is a mixed bag. The overall design and look match the Fallout universe exactly. My example, however, arrived unpainted, looking nothing like I expected it to look. I know the technology and "look and feel" of the game series is "used retro science fiction", but this clock is as drab as drab gets, with no logos or anything to maintain that sense of having something form the Fallout world, even if it's a fake. Further, the clock was at one point supposed to be wearable like the PipBoy used in the game. That too, has been nullified by poor craftsmanship.
Furthermore, the level of customer service provided for this clock from amazon.com and Bethesda SoftWorks, the game's license holder, is incredibly underwhelming. For one, in order to get any warranty work done on it, you must send in money, and the clock, to some company in California that no one's ever heard of. So for yet more money you lose possession of a broken clock that originally only cost you $50. Compare this sort of "service" to the defective
Gears of War 2 Amazon.com Exclusive Lancer. When the NECA Lancer had its own battery issue, similar to the one described above, NECA and amazon.com worked to fix it somehow. NECA sent out replacement parts, for free, in a timely manner if you contacted them. amazon.com handed out $10 coupons good for the next purchase on ANYTHING they sell. Wither that level of customer service from amazon.com and Bethesda SoftWorks for this quasi-defective clock?
All in all, SAVE YOUR MONEY. The Collectors' Edition gives you so much more value, with the lunchbox and bobblehead being the best collectibles this year. With incredibly poor workmanship, lack of attention to detail, unknown warranty service from a company whose reliability can't be ascertained, and overall price point, this clock simply is not worth the extra $50 price.
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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing Game; Terrible Clock, December 2, 2008
= Fun:1.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Fallout 3: Amazon.com Exclusive Survival Edition (Video Game)
Fallout & Fallout 2 were my favorite games and Fallout 3 doesn't fall short; in fact it feels like it was worth waiting a decade for it!
My review here is about the "Amazon Exclusive" Survival Edition; which for $50 gives you an extremely bad clock which as a very cheap plastic feeling that sucks batteries and stops working every once in a while. If you want to get it repaired you have to pay an extra $10. A refund seems to be totally out of question.
I was (and mostly still am) are a big fan of Bethesda and like shopping @ Amazon but both of them disappointed me this time.
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